ispano6 wrote: ↑20 Nov 2020, 18:15
Honda should also look for design inspiration for US product outside of the US. The Honda E, Avancier/UR-V, X-NV, Step Wagon design language would be vastly more interesting and appealing. Hopefully Honda's recent restructure will bring Honda's design language back to the designs used in Asia.
This was designed in the US and looks fine:
Whereas I don't know where the 2022 Civic was designed but it's
so bad, it looks like a big slabby blob. It's so boring and out-dated looking, it's just not the crisp & futuristic styling we expect from Honda. It just doesn't look a Japanese car, it looks like a boring German car.
The Civic should have that nice character-line and flared rear arch like the TLX has, yet it doesn't -- just a boring flat surface. The TLX has much nicer rear lights too, the Civic seems so generic by comparison.
Even the Civic sedan from 16 years ago is a nicer design
, so much more crisp.
The whole point of a new car is that it's supposed to look better than the old one, surely?
Anyway, this is besides the point, but the 2022 Civic is really the only Honda car design I've particularly disliked. Thankfully everything else is good. Honda e is obviously excellent like you say, new Jazz is a smart little car, N-Box is delightfully boxy etc.
Conservative styling is fine for the bigger Accord, Pilot and Ridgeline, but for the new Civic to have
so conservative styling is just not right IMO... such a step backward from the previous-gen Civic and ILX. If you parked the three cars side-by-side Mk10 Civic, Mk11 Civic & ILX, people would struggle to pick the Mk11 Civic as the newest model of the three.